2018 Hot Consumer Trends: Technology Turns Human
- Consumers
expect technology interactions to be controlled by intonation, facial
expression and body language
- Earphones
will become a 24/7 accessory, even when sleeping
- 51 percent of Augmented Reality/Virtual Reality users believe artificial intelligence (AI) will render ads indistinguishable from the actual products
- 51 percent of Augmented Reality/Virtual Reality users believe artificial intelligence (AI) will render ads indistinguishable from the actual products
Exploring the future from an early
adopter user perspective, Ericsson (NASDAQ: ERIC) ConsumerLab presents the
seventh edition of its annual trend report, The 10 Hot Consumer Trends for 2018 and beyond.
The report points to a paradigm shift as
consumers expect digital technology to increasingly operate on human terms.
Body language, facial expression and intonation will augment voice and touch to
control consumer interaction with tech devices, easing adaption in an
ever-increasing pace of technological change.
These are the 10 Trends for 2018 and
beyond:
1. Your
Body is the User Interface:
More than half of current users of intelligent voice assistants believe that we
will use body language, expression, intonation and touch to interact with tech
devices as if they were fellow humans. Some 2 in 3 think this will happen
within a mere 3 years.
2. Augmented
Hearing: 63 percent of
consumers would like earphones that translate languages in real time. 52
percent want to block out a family member’s snoring.
3.
Eternal
Newbies: 30 percent say
new technology makes it hard to keep their skills up to date. But it also makes
us instant experts. 46 percent say the internet allows them to learn and forget
skills faster than ever.
4. Social
Broadcasting:
Social media is being overrun by traditional broadcasters. But half of
consumers say AI would be useful to check facts posted on social networks.
5. Intelligent
Ads: Advertisements may
become too smart for their own good. More than half of augmented reality
(AR)/virtual reality (VR) users think ads will become so realistic they will
eventually replace the products themselves.
6. Uncanny
Communication: 50
percent think not being able to tell the difference between human and machine
would spook them out. 40 percent would also be spooked by a smartphone that
reacts to their mood.
7.
Leisure
Society: 32 percent of
students and working people do not think they need a job to develop a
meaningful life. 40 percent say they would like a robot that works and earns
income for them, freeing up leisure time.
8. Your
Photo is a Room:
Imagine being able to walk into a photo and relive a memory. 3 out of 4 believe
that in only 5 years they will use virtual reality to walk around in smartphone
photos.
9. Streets
in the Air: City streets
may be choked with traffic but the skies remain free. 39 percent think their
city needs a road network for drones and flying vehicles. But almost as many
worry that a drone would drop on their head.
10.The
Charged Future: The
connected world will require mobile power. More than 80 percent believe that in
only 5 years we will have long-lasting batteries that will put an end to
charging concerns.
“Today, you have to know all the
intricacies of the devices you use. But in the future, the devices will know
you instead. For this to become a reality, devices must be able to relay
complex human interaction data to cloud-based processing, and respond
intuitively within milliseconds, increasing requirements on next generation
connectivity.”
The insights in the 10 Hot Consumer
Trends for 2018 report are based on Ericsson ConsumerLab’s global research
activities over more than 22 years, and draw on data from an online survey of
advanced internet users in 10 influential cities across the world, performed in
October 2017. Although the study only represents 30 million citizens, their
early adopter profile makes them important to understand when exploring future
trends.

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